Abstract
Using observations from the Hubble Space Telescope archive, color-magnitude diagrams (CMDs) have been constructed for globular cluster 4 in the Fornax dwarf spheroidal galaxy and its surrounding field. These diagrams extend below the main-sequence turnoffs and have yielded measurements of the ages of the populations. The most prominent features of the CMD of the Fornax field population are a heavily populated red clump of horizontal-branch (HB) stars, a broad red giant branch (RGB), and a main sequence that spans a large range in luminosity. In this CMD, there are very few stars at the positions of the HBs of the five globular clusters in Fornax, which suggests that only a very small fraction of the field population resembles the clusters in age and chemical composition. The large span in luminosity of the main sequence suggests that star formation began in the field 12 Gyr ago and continued to 0.5 Gyr ago. There are separate subgiant branches in the CMD, which indicates that the star formation was not continuous but occurred in bursts. The CMD of cluster 4 has a steep RGB, from which we estimate [Fe/H] -2.0. This is considerably lower than estimates from the integrated light of the cluster, and the origins of this discrepancy are discussed. Cluster 4 has a very red HB and is, therefore, a prime example of the second-parameter effect. Comparisons of cluster 4 with the other Fornax clusters and with M68, a very metal-poor globular cluster of the Galactic halo, reveal that cluster 4 is 3 Gyr younger than these other clusters, which have much bluer HBs. This age difference is consistent with the prediction that age is the second parameter to within the uncertainties. The CMD of cluster 4 is virtually identical to that of the unusual globular cluster of the Galactic halo Ruprecht 106, which suggests that they have very similar ages and chemical compositions. We discuss the possibility that cluster 4 also resembles R106 in having a higher [Fe/H] than is indicated by its steep RGB and also a lower [α/Fe] ratio than is usual for a globular cluster, as indicated by some recent observations of R106. The CMDs of the five Fornax clusters indicate that cluster age is a major—but probably not the sole—second parameter. Buonanno et al. recently concluded that cluster density probably influenced the HB morphologies of clusters 1, 2, 3, and 5. Despite a very large difference in central density, the HBs of cluster 4 and R106 are very similar. This suggests that density may act as a second parameter in clusters that have HBs that are on the verge of moving toward the blue or are already blue for another reason, such as very old age.
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